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A fall heat wave is hitting California. How to prepare, and when it will end



A fall heat wave peaking Wednesday and Thursday is expected to push temperatures in Southern California up to 15 degrees above normal for this time of year and potentially break heat records in Northern California. By Thursday, Southern California valleys are forecast to see highs in the 90s, with downtown Los Angeles in the low 90s, the beaches in the 80s and low deserts above 100. A heat advisory is in effect in the San Francisco Bay Area through Thursday night. Temperatures could hit 100 in some parts, and overnight lows will be in the mid 60s to lower 70s, according to the National Weather Service. The warmest temperatures will be inland, but the coast will remain warm. It is possible new record highs could be set Thursday in San Francisco, San Jose and Half Moon Bay, according to the weather service . The unseasonably hot weather brings increased concern for heat-related illness, especially among vulnerable populations. Heat affects everyone but especially elderly people, children, pregnant people, people with chronic illness and unhoused people. In a warming world, heat waves are expected to increase in duration and intensity. But there are things you can do, and avoid, to keep yourself and your family healthy and safe: Don’t just look out for yourself. Experts suggest checking in with the most vulnerable people you know during times of intense heat. Give your neighbors or family members a call and see how they’re doing. Do they need anything? Offer to bring over water or go grocery shopping for them so they can stay cool. Climate change is transforming the character of the West’s hottest periods — making them more frequent, more persistent, more humid and more lethal. Greenhouse gas emissions from the burning of fossil fuels also play a role , not only by fueling higher air temperatures but also by warming ocean water. Higher sea temperatures along the California coast lead to a thinner marine layer and weaker onshore winds that decrease the flow of cooler ocean air to inland areas. The stalled high pressure also squeezes downward in the atmosphere, driving out the remaining marine layer, effectively shutting off Southern California’s natural air conditioning. California has chronically undercounted the death toll from extreme heat, which disproportionately harms poor people, elderly people and others who are vulnerable. Each year, extreme heat kills more Americans than any other climate-fueled hazard, including hurricanes, floods and wildfires, but it gets far less attention because it kills so quietly. Like other effects of climate change, its harms fall most heavily on those who are poor, infirm, very young or elderly. State data also show that Black Californians are more likely than those of any other race to die from heat, and people over the age of 65 are especially at risk. People die in stifling homes, apartments and trailers they can’t afford to air-condition. They collapse while working in the sun at jobs they can’t afford to lose. What for some is a nuisance is for others a threat to survival. Temperatures are expected to cool Friday.
Publish Date : 2023-10-18 16:42:04
Image and News Source : latimes
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